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USA News
President Bush plans to tackle petrol price
'Fairly treated' : He said that the main problem facing the US is that it now gets 60% of its crude from foreign suppliers, many of whom have unstable governments and anti-American policies. As a result, the US had to step up its efforts to become energy independent, especially when consumers were bearing the brunt of oil market problems by having to pay more for their petrol, he explained. Calling high petrol prices a hidden tax that hurts consumers and companies, Mr. Bush said a main worry was that corporate and retail spending will decline as gasoline prices top $3 a gallon. Mr. Bush said that he is asking the Federal Trade Commission and the Department of Justice to look into whether the higher price of petrol was being caused by market manipulation. Consumers need to be "treated fairly at the gas pumps", he added. In an effort to get more crude oil and petrol onto the market, Mr. Bush said the US would not top up the strategic petroleum reserve over the summer. "By deferring deposits until the fall, we'll leave a little more oil on the market. Every little bit helps," he said. Different views: However, Mr. Bush warned that any steps he introduced would simply be short-term measures that needed to be backed up by a shift in mentality among US consumers and companies. "Long-term we need to power our automobiles with something other than oil," Mr. Bush said in Washington. What the US now needs to do is step up its efforts to conserve energy, and invest in new, environmentally friendlier sources of fuel such as ethanol, he explained.
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US 'approves war on terror plans' US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has approved plans to give the Pentagon greater leeway to deploy special forces around the world, a US report says. According to the Washington Post, teams of special forces have been sent to 20 countries to carry out operational planning and intelligence gathering. Mr. Rumsfeld has long insisted that the US military needs a fundamental revamp to fight modern anti-terror campaigns. The Pentagon refused to comment on the report, which quoted unnamed officials. According to the Washington Post, US forces overseas now face fewer obstacles before beginning military operations in a foreign country. Requirements for the US ambassador to give permission for special forces operations have been waived, the Post reports. Envoys now need only to be informed of planned military action. The officials also suggested that the Pentagon has drawn up a list of likely targets around the world for retaliation in the event of a terror attack on the US. 'Three plans': The Pentagon has announced a shift in its approach to the war on terror in recent months, rebranding the conflict as a "long war" akin to the decades-long struggle between the US and the Soviet Union. In its report, the Washington Post suggests that the approval and implementation of the new campaign plan, as well as two subordinate plans, have been the Pentagon's highest priority. Together, they amount to an assignment of responsibilities to different military commands to conduct a "long war" against terrorism, the paper reports. Defense officials revealed the apparent contents of the three plans: 1-The main plan sets goals for the US in the ongoing war on terror, and divides responsibilities between regional commands.2-A second plan focuses on al-Qaeda and similar Islamist militant movements around the world. 3-The final plan details possible military responses to a major terror strike against the US. One US official quoted in the Washington Post said the list of possible targets detailed "what terrorists or bad guys we would hit if the gloves came off". |